dandy_warhol
Cyburbian
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Mr. Porsche was an SS officer and part of the Nazi party.
He designed a significant number of military vehicles for the nazis, including tanks, tank destroyers, and others.Mr. Porsche was an SS officer and part of the Nazi party.
He designed a significant number of military vehicles for the nazis, including tanks, tank destroyers, and others.
I recently taught Itty Bitty about, "Punch Bug; no punch backs." She has enjoyed punching me.
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It was simply The Volkswagen.
The auto stop start thing along with a host of other annoying features can be turned off with an OBD2 dongle and software.
I took care of mine at lunch today so that it is disabled so that I don't have to turn it off each and every time.Yep. I get the intent of the feature but I hate it; it just doesn't feel safe to me. We always turn that off immediately after purchase.
Pretty much describes my Fiat. It will be 10 years that I've had her in January.Ruby the Subie (Outback) just turned 9 and is still running like a champ. Other than oil changes, filters, tires, and new brakes she has been maintenance free.
Funny, I don't know any other people that do this beyond my family -- I was taught to keep a notebook in the door of the car to keep track of fill ups, mileage, and any maintenance done on the vehicle. For years I complained to my dad that is was unnecessary but it is nice to be able to look back and say "well, I changed my distributor cap out on this date and after that I continually got 50 mpg on the highway*".I keep track of my mileage with every fill up of gasoline in my Jeep (as I have done with every tank of gas bought for my vehicles going back to February 2007) and when I first got it I was wondering about the utility of the auto start/stop so I'd drive for a few weeks with it enabled and a few weeks with it disabled. Nearly all of my driving is on suburban arterial roads or through dense downtown and residential neighborhoods with quite a bit of stopping for stoplights and stop signs. By my calculations, keeping the function enabled was giving me more than 1mpg in fuel economy (I cannot find the spreadsheet I used for the experiment and cannot recall the exact dates to re-run the numbers now); I believe the final figure was an extra 1.56mpg or 1.65mpg. Not a lot in the grand scheme of things but definitely not nothing. And it adds up, especially in a vehicle like mine where I struggle to get 17mpg from a tank if it's all city driving.
As for the auto start/stop wearing out the starter or alternator? I don't buy it. I've looked that up and seen no evidence of that being the case, though I didn't dive all that deep. The most stressful starts on a vehicle's starting system are starting up a cold engine - so the auto start/stop doesn't come into play in those situations where the vehicle has being parked for a while. Spinning the starter of a hot engine, that's been running for a while is much less stressful on the components than cranking from cold.
I keep the function turned on on my Jeep.
Funny, I don't know any other people that do this beyond my family -- I was taught to keep a notebook in the door of the car to keep track of fill ups, mileage, and any maintenance done on the vehicle. For years I complained to my dad that is was unnecessary but it is nice to be able to look back and say "well, I changed my distributor cap out on this date and after that I continually got 50 mpg on the highway*".
Probably universal fuse replacement. Folding the penny in half made it thick enough to fit into the clips at each end of the fuse (see row of fuses on the left)(This would be a better story if my dad were still around to fill in the huge blanks.)
My dad, a shade tree mechanic from the age of 12, was known for fixing cars on the side of the road when need be. After he passed, I got his small coin collection -- which included 3-4 pennies that we bent around in a half circle. I don't remember what had broken on multiple vehicles, but I know that the solution was to bend a penny and stick it in the slot/ cylinder -- which would make the vehicle drivable until it could be fixed properly.
(Not sure how he bent them on the side of the road; maybe he made a couple to have in his car -- just in case?)
My daughter loves slug bug so much that in a couple years I must get her a bug to drive so she can cruise around town knowing she is the cause of violence.I recently taught Itty Bitty about, "Punch Bug; no punch backs." She has enjoyed punching me.
The trouble with clutches is the hydraulics, with a master and a slave cylinder. My mechanic said the master one is 3 hrs labor just to access.Anyone know an actually affordable mechanic? Quotes for my clutch are running $2200 to FU I'm buying a new car.
I would guess that parts would be around $300 +/- and 5 to 7 hours of labor..Anyone know an actually affordable mechanic? Quotes for my clutch are running $2200 to FU I'm buying a new car.
Let's hope you're 'good' now. As $2142 is alot less than then $33,000+ for a new 2024 Mustang.$2142 to totally redo the clutch. I also found out I have a TR-3650 transmission instead of the usual T-45. Nice to know. Part of me wanted to ask for the upgraded 26 spline clutch, but I just don't want to pay the hundreds extra just for that. I think I've replaced most of the major systems in that car now. I think it should last for a while now.
Hmmm... now I'm wondering if mine was an early 2001 build or late 2001 build...$2142 to totally redo the clutch. I also found out I have a TR-3650 transmission instead of the usual T-45. Nice to know. Part of me wanted to ask for the upgraded 26 spline clutch, but I just don't want to pay the hundreds extra just for that. I think I've replaced most of the major systems in that car now. I think it should last for a while now.
From my quick at work not supposed to be doing this reading it looks like the 3650 is late 2001, but only in the Bullitt and Cobra. not sure if it included the GT or base model.Hmmm... now I'm wondering if mine was an early 2001 build or late 2001 build...
Nice! My friend and I occasionally take a "lunch break" to go romping through the desert to get to our favorite sports bar. He has some upgraded suspension that makes driving even more fun.Not a "car" but my oldest and I (co-signer) brought home a 2014 Polaris RZR 1000 4-seater yesterday.
Not a "car" but my oldest and I (co-signer) brought home a 2014 Polaris RZR 1000 4-seater yesterday.
Street-legal UHVs are common around here.My brother has a 4-seater RZR that he bought during the pandemic. He's equipped his with turn signals, larger fenders and a few other things to make it a bit more "road friendly". He lives out in the middle of nowhere and has turned it into his "getting around town" vehicle (in his town of less than 1,000 people). He's used it a couple times to come visit us at the beach about 20 miles from his house and even driven it the ~40 miles down to my parents house a few times. Usually there will be at least a couple other similar RZRs in the grocery store parking lot up near his place.
My kids absolutely love it and any time we go to his place all they talk about on the way up is whether or not Uncle Andy will take him out on the RZR.
When I first saw it, I thought to myself, "Well, that was a dumb purchase!" but man do I sort of want one after riding in it!Though I think if I were going to buy something like that, I'd rather have the Mahindra Roxor but I've herd those take a lot more aftermarket work to make them street legal in most instances.
Street-legal UHVs are common around here.
So...Spring and Summer are done and we are in the midst of the perfect weather part of early Fall in our part of the country.So the 1982 VW Rabbit convertible is fixed and safely stored away in my dad's garage until spring. The issue ended up being timing. I'm not really sure how the timing would have gotten so out, but I'm glad the fix was relatively easy and inexpensive.
I remember one beautiful late summer day in 1997 when I drove my mom's 1992 Pontiac Sunbird convertible ~220 miles/4 hours south to my first orientation day at college.My wife has a convertible that she never took the top down when it was drivable. My daughter now has a convertible and I'm yet to see her take the top down. I question my family and their use of convertibles.
We had it out a couple of times. The last time it got too hot. I have a new thermostat for it, but haven't made time to do the work. This summer has just flown by.So...Spring and Summer are done and we are in the midst of the perfect weather part of early Fall in our part of the country.
Did you get this Rabbit out into the wild and enjoy the beautiful top-down life?
My jeep never had doors on it or the soft top. They just sat in the garage. I did have the bikini top on it, but that's more for some shade than anything else. If I drove my wife's convertible for some reason the first thing I did was drop the top. As long as it's not raining, what's the problem.
I'm top-down all the time when I'm in the mustang. The only exceptions are sometimes on the Interstate in heavy traffic, mainly because of the noise of semis, or if I'm going to a client meeting that requires my hair to look reasonably kept.My wife has a convertible that she never took the top down when it was drivable. My daughter now has a convertible and I'm yet to see her take the top down. I question my family and their use of convertibles.
Teenage SR:My first car was a MGA. I drove it with the top down even in the rain--as long as you were above about 45mph, the rain would blow over the windshield. The soft top was useless as two shits anyway with the janky side curtains. Got hit in the head with a hailstone once, which wasn't great.
I have the 2.7 ecoboost paired with the 10 speed transmission in my F150. It has the same torque as the 5 L V8. It gets better gas milage then my honda pilot. I like it.I'm thinking my next car should be one of the ecoboost Mustang convertibles. I really don't care what color, but I don't like their fighter grey that much.
I'm thinking my next car should be one of the ecoboost Mustang convertibles. I really don't care what color, but I don't like their fighter grey that much.
Because...Mustang bros...I'm always disappointed in the gearing choices for the mustangs. Really, you couldn't drop 4.10 gears in the darkhorse and to go as weak as 3.15. At least make them all 3.55 gears except the big boys.
I test drove a f150 with the 3.5L. It was peppy. I was able to easily spin a tire on dry pavement. It would be extremely fun in a vehicle half the weight.I really wish they'd drop a version of the boosted 3.5L into the mustang. That would be a blast. Bonus points for an AWD version to really stick it to the ground & press you into the seat. The new 5.0 V8 Mustang feels kind of heavy in the front on handling.
I'm convinced they are in cahoots with aftermarket companies. I know a guy with a dark horse on reserve that is already looking at gearing mods--he's gonna violate the warranty the day he gets it, I'm certain.I'm always disappointed in the gearing choices for the mustangs. Really, you couldn't drop 4.10 gears in the darkhorse and to go as weak as 3.15. At least make them all 3.55 gears except the big boys.
I'm convinced they are in cahoots with aftermarket companies. I know a guy with a dark horse on reserve that is already looking at gearing mods--he's gonna violate the warranty the day he gets it, I'm certain.
I'm convinced they are in cahoots with aftermarket companies.
I had a Dodge Spirit with the 3.0L V6. The transmissions in these cars were complete trash and prone to failure, which is what happened to mine.I still really want a Plymouth Acclaim somehow, even though I know they're low-end Mopar junk from the post-Iacocca era and it's not a really great idea to use one as an "appliance car".
The 2.5 4 cylinder equipped Acclaim isn't terrible, although its no Volvo Redblock or Honda D block. I believe the base model 4cyl 89-95 Acclaim would have come with a 3 speed auto and a 2.5. A three speed! To my knowledge while a 5 speed manual was optional on the Acclaim/Dodge Spirit, virtually none were ordered and the only known manual swap setups (that are "direct fit" so to say, not crazy customfab sh*t where anything is possible) come from the Dodge Spirit R/T, itself an obscure 91-92 only performance version of the Acclaim's Dodge cousin. Meaning, you're not gonna manual swap an Acclaim without deep deep pockets.
Most Acclaims in 2023 have been long crushed. Some survive as regular cars in the non salt States and British Columbia's Lower Mainland. But here in the Northeast, their numbers are scant enough that I get excited when I see one!
These things were as common as dirt in the latter 1990s, when they had reached semi-hoopdi status already. My Father's good friend had a '90 Acclaim that was brown on red interior (eeek) and he kept on the road until 2001. One of my school friends, John P., would get picked up in a really steazy low mileage green on grey interior '95 Acclaim when we were in Day Camp together summers of 1997 and 1998. I later jammed frequently with John in High School (he played bass) but the Acclaim been traded for a '98 Corolla that got handed down, and he would drive me around in when we were yutes up to no good. 90s Corolla's are objectively better cars than 90s Acclaims. But I still want an f'in acclaim! I must be crazy.
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